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Making Non-violence
Work
By Starhawk
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An
ecological understanding of violence sees it as a pattern of
relationships that underlies all systems of domination and control. Such systems
are characterized by:
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The concentration of resources and the fruits of labor to benefit the
few.
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Top-down decision making. Bosses who give orders and issue directives
that others must obey.
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Violence
underlies these systems. Violence is:
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The capacity to inflict physical pain, harm or death.
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The
capacity to punish by restricting freedom and limiting choices.
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The
capacity to withhold vital resources or rewards.
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The capacity to inflict emotional and
psychological damage and to shame and humiliate.
Systems of
domination, no matter how powerful they seem, are unstable. They
are inherently unsustainable, because to be sustainable any system or
organism must be based on balanced, cycling flows of energy and
resources. The system maintains itself by:
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The actual use of force and violence. The use of force, however, is costly. No system of domination can
afford to use force
to control every aspect of its functioning.
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The willingness of enforcers to inflict
violence. No gun shoots itself:
a human hand pulls the trigger, a
human mind makes
the choice to do so.
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Fear: the system is maintained not
because it actually uses force, but because we fear its capacity to do so.
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Hope: we accept the system and comply
with its demands not because we necessarily benefit from it, but because we hope to do so. We might win the lottery, or
become the CEO of a dotcom, or
the star of a sitcom. Such hopes keep us embedded in the system.
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Limiting imagination: making us believe
we have no choice but to comply. Restricting our thinking to their categories.
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A strategy
of nonviolent direct action seeks to destabilize the systems of
control by undermining the mechanisms that maintain it:
- Radical imagination: refusing to accept the dominator's
picture
of
the world.
- Thinking outside the lines. Daring to dream what has
never been before, to think the unthinkable, and then to
create it.
- Hope:
replacing the false hope the system offers with a
vision of a free, just and abundant world. Embodying that vision in
how we organize,
how we treat each other, in the symbols we choose and the actions we take.
Marshalling the skills, tools and
resources to make that
vision real, and making it so desirable, so
inspiring, so
sexy, that
the pale hopes the system offers cannot
compare.
- When people become hopeless about
improving their
condition, they are no longer invested in the status quo and can be moved
to take action against it. When the system goes too far, it sows
the seeds of its own collapse.
- Courage: The more we can move
beyond fear, the less
control the system has over us. Courage can be found
through
individual faith: not necessarily in a God or
religious tradition,
but faith in human capacities for
change or in nature's infinite
creativity.
As well, there are many psychological techniques and personal disciplines that can help us learn to manage fear.
- Conscious
choice and responsibility: Knowing that we do have
choices in any situation. Being willing to accept
the consequences of those choices.
- Solidarity:
When we support each other in actions and tense
situations, when we act together to protect the
most vulnerable
among us, when we can face the potential violence
of the system in community instead of alone, we undermine
fear.
- Raising the costs: When we cease
complying out of fear, we
force the system to actually enforce its decrees. This is
costly in terms of money, materials, and the undermining of public
support.
We force
the system to reveal the underlying violence
that
supports it.
- Undermining compliance: the police, the army, the prison guards
are not generally of the class that actually benefits from
the current economic and political system. When their willingness to
serve as enforcers is undermined, the system falls.
To do this, and survive, we need to restrain the potential violence of the system, which has the potential to simply eliminate
anyone who opposes it. The absolute violence of the system is
restrained by a subtle web of forces both individual and social.
The more we understand how those forces function to tighten or
loosen that web, the more room to maneuver we can secure for
our actions.
Nonviolence as a tactic is sometimes
criticized for being self-sacrificial, for relinquishing the right to self
defense against
a the state. But all forms of political struggle require
some sacrifice. Strategic nonviolence, correctly understood, can be our
most powerful form of self defense.
Violence is unleashed by:
- Dehumanization: seeing the opponent as
a category rather than a full human being. This is how racism, sexism, homophobia,
classism etc. maintain systems of domination. People of color, punks,
anarchists in dreadlocks, visibly poor people, all who fit a
stereotype
of prejudice are at greater physical and legal risk
in an
action.
- Perception of
threat: When we feel we
are being attacked, we are more likely to strike first. A global strategy to counter
our movement has been to portray us as threatening
terrorists, and the police as "saviors" of the people.
- Drugs or alcohol that loosen
inhibitions.
- Lack of witnesses.
- Lack of potential repercussions.
- Approval by the
authorities.
- Approval of figures of respect:
teachers, church leaders, etc.
- Group pressure: Men who alone would
never molest a woman can be pressured into joining a gang rape. Once a group
consciousness sees
brutality or atrocity as acceptable, it becomes easier for individuals to participate and harder to resist.
- Perception of legitimacy by the public.
Violence is
restrained by:
- Human
empathy and reluctance to kill or harm. (And yes, this
applies even to
the police, although obviously not universally. But
many studies have
shown that even in wartime, the average
soldier must be specifically
trained to overcome inhibitions against killing.)
- Fear of repercussions, personal, political and legal.
- Visibility and the presence of witnesses and/or media. We often see the police
using restraint on the street during the action, and then brutalizing
and intimidating prisoners in jail.
- Public
opinion and fear of censure.
- Law, and
the structures of accountability that are built into the
system.
- A campaign of nonviolent direct action begins its self defense
long before hitting the streets, by seeking to tighten that web of
restraint, through any or all of the following:
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Outreach and education so that the public understands the goals
and tactics of our action, and to counter dehumanization.
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Making alliances and building
coalitions with groups that can
increase public pressure and potential
political repercussions for the authorities.
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Holding public officials
accountable for past acts of violence.
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Planning for group solidarity and
strategizing how to
protect those at greatest risk.
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Passing laws that restrain the
violence of the authorities; opposing laws that unleash it.
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In the moment of confrontation,
nonviolent self defense means we:
- Know what our intention is for
the action: literally stopping a meeting? Building alliances? Drawing
attention to an issue? The specific choices we make will depend on our
intention.
- Convey that intention clearly to
the group as best we can, so that everyone understands the reasons
behind the choices we may make.
- Oppose the power of violence with
the power of our radical imagination. Remember that every act we take
is a choice, and that we have choices in any situation.
- Seek to undermine
dehumanization,
by not ourselves dehumanizing our opponents, for when we do we simply
reinforce the mindset and energetic patterns that encourage violence.
- Remain human ourselves, staying calm, centered, and not giving way to fear.
- Act in unexpected
ways, not doing
the dance of violence and intimidation, but writing our own steps and
music.
Bring art, music, drums, seeds, masks, puppets and magic into
confrontation to embody our vision and hope.
Seek to broaden the awareness of our opponents that they are also
making choices, that their behavior is not predetermined.
- Use humor and surprise.
- Know what may escalate the
tension in a situation, and what may de-escalate it, and make a
conscious choice about which to do.
- Act to strengthen our group
solidarity and support.
Ask these
questions before we take any extreme act:
- Does this further our intention?
- What base of support do we have
for taking this action?
- What support do we risk losing?
- Why is this act worth risking
that support?
- Did we agree to this act?
- If not, what will it do to our
community solidarity?
- Will this act loosen the
web of restraint?
- Can we afford to do so at this
moment?
- Who is most at risk, if we do, and have they agreed to
accept
that risk?
- Does this act embody our hope and
vision?
- Do I know and trust the person
urging me to take this
action?
- Does this action embody the world
we're fighting for?
This article was originally published as a handout at http://www.starhawk.org/activism/nonviolencework.html
and revised for this format.

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